2012-03-01
2012-03-31
x cialis

STATION
CNN 19
CNNW 19
MSNBC 8
MSNBCW 8
KGO (ABC) 6
WJLA 5
KPIX (CBS) 3
WMAR (ABC) 3
WUSA (CBS) 3
WBAL (NBC) 2
WJZ (CBS) 2
WRC 2
LANGUAGE
English 96

Set Clip Length:


with a tube in her throat to help her breathe. >>> also in indiana, a rescue of the four-legged variety. >> this is trigger. >> trigger and tyson were found hiding in the rubble of their owner's home in henryville. and one official says there is, quote, total devastation in parts of the surrounding county. 15 deaths have been reported so far across the state. . -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>> this is "cnn saturday morning." it's march 3rd, and i'm david mattingly. tornadoes shred through the midwest and south killing more than 30 people, and there is a new threat of storms today. >>> then in two hours washington state republicans will officially select who they think should go up against barack obama. could ron paul finally win one? >>> bus t we begin with the ferocious killer storms that went through the midwest and southern u.s. at least 32 people are dead. now the frantic search is on for survivors, and there are new threat this morning of more severe weather. the monster storm stretched from the deep south, alabama, across the border into tennessee and all t

up to kentucky and indiana to the hardest hit communities. you can see tornado in tennessee. dozens of people were injured in the storms. we are watching all angles of the story this morning. susan c susan is in ohio. rob is in tennessee where we have seen significant damage. bonnie schneider is standing by in the severe weather center. the damage we have seen have been small towns like henriville. how bad is it? >> reporter: it is very bad. crushing damage. people here are reeling from what happened to the area. 15 deaths confirmed so far in the entire state of kentucky. a couple of them here in clark county. just to give you an idea, look at this school bus, it was flown here from across the street where the high school is located in henriville. here is the front of the bus you are seeing and the back behind it. the chassis of the bus is resting this way. bus this way, chassis off to the side. it's an indication of how powerful the storms are. a number of us are lined up here, so i can't walk too, too much. as you look up in this direction, giving you a look at some of the power l

on its destructive path today. these pictures from indiana. another ten twisters reported across the southeast late today. the newest threat comes after those images out of the nation's heartland, that indiana high school shredded in henryville. a school bus hurled across the street and from ohio, this father carrying his 9-month-old, from what's left of their neighborhood, their home gone. survivor hugging his dog, grateful they both survived. the toll is going up. at least 38 people killed, thins hundreds injured. we're now at 108 reported tornados from this system alone. millions of americans across 11 states from the gulf coast to ohio valley. hit by twisters and for so many, frightening sounds they will never forget. the sirens followed by those winds. our team tonight reports in from across the disaster zone. meteorologist zinger zee starts us off in henryville, indiana with late-breaking if yous about the twisters there, and its intensity. >> reporter: good evening, david, good evening, everyone. the national weather service coming out with its rating an ef-4 tornado, wind

. this video like the first one shot in henryville, indiana. all told at least 37 people are dead. the number of missing are impossible to know right now. i'm don lemon thank you for joining us in the cnn newsroom. i want to bring in meteorologist jackie jarris. first the video from the gas station. >> you can see the debris within that funnel. it's amazing to think how close they must have been to that tornado and feeling the impact and that sucking in as air rushes into the tornado. there you can see in the middle that swirling around that's debris. we think there might be one or two vortices. this was in an intense cation stage. and the i-reporter video from kevin wells. >> can we listen to it a little bit more and talk about it? >> i have friends over there. >> [ bleep ]. >> jackie that is so frightening. kevin will join us live in a little bit. this is incredible video. >> we have new information in this hour that that tornado was an ef-4. it is one of the strongest tornados ever recorded in the top 2%. winds between 166 to 200 miles per hour. that can cause massive devastation. look at

that continued on its destructive path today. these pictures from indiana. another ten twisters reported across the southeast late today. let's get right to the radar this hour. the system still over southern georgia and northern florida where in some parts they are still warning there could be more. the newest threat comes after those images out of the nation's heartland. indiana heartland shredded in henryville. a school hurled across the street and a father carrying their 9-month-old for what is left of the neighborhood. their home is gone and a survivor hugging his dog, grateful they both survived. the toll is going up. 38 people killed, hundreds injured. we're at 108 reported tornados from this system alone. millions of americans across 11 states from the gulf coast to ohio valley. hit by twisters and for so many, frightening sounds they will never forget. the sirens and wind. our team tonight reports in from across the disaster zone. we begin with meteorologist ginger zee in henryville, indiana tonight. ginger, good evening. >> david, just moments ago. the national weather service gave us

school bus through the front of a diner in henryville, indiana, plus an entire town has been wiped off the map by devastating twisters. we will go live to the hardest hit areas. >>dave: and gas prices climb for the 25th straight day. there is no end in sight. can anything be done to ease your pain at the pump? >> it could cost you billions to bail out the auto industry but chevrolet is pulling the plug on the volt with poor sales. "fox & friends" begins right now. >>alisyn: good morning, everyone, and right to the breaking news, it has been devastated throughout the midwest. we are waking up to the weather alert because deadly twisters have torn up the country. >> tons of hopes ripped to pieces days after around round of tornadoes and some of the west damage in southern indiana, tornadoes leave 14 people dead there. >> we have total destruction in northeast clark county. and we have total destruction in parts of southern scott county. we have total destruction in parts of washington county. we have multiple fatalities that we are aware in the three counties. >>clayton: a dozen people k

. at least three people died there. now, let's get you to indiana where we've seen some of the worst damage in all these storms. people are counting their blessings as strange as that may sound because by the looks of the town, things could have been so much worse as far as the loss of life goes. susan candiotti is live in henryville. susan, the bad news keeps on coming as we see these pictures. is this town getting back on its feet today? >> reporter: oh, i think it's far too soon to say that, but they certainly are trying their best. joining us now is the governor of indiana, mitch daniels. thank you for joining us live on cn. you just guangdong with a tour. tell us some of the things you saw and your assessment. >> we're not unfamiliar with the wrath of mother nature in indiana but this is about as worse as we've seen in the years since i've been in this job. i will say that it proves that preparation and better warning systems do matter and undoubtedly saved a lot of lives. and i'm very impressed with the work of our people who responded. we're getting better at that every time it happe

in indiana where the girl was found. susan, so sad to hear this news. you have gotten a chance and you have spoken exclusively to the man who found her as we were getting this sad information. >> reporter: it is, indeed, so sad, especially because this really is a case and a story that captured everyone's heart. i think everyone that had heard about this family and little angel had been pulling for her at least to be, as you said, a symbol of hope, of survival. but now it appears that her injuries were just too much for that little one to overcome, and the family made a very difficult decision quite clearly. but i'm standing here, don, in the debris field, the aftermath of that tornado where it all happened. this twister when it came in on friday hit a field behind me. you can see where mainly mobile homes were located and the babcock family lived there, a family of five. a husband, a father and mother, ages 20, 21, and their three children. and a neighbor by the name of jason miller had convinced them to come hofover from their smal trailer to his double wide to take shelter. they hunkered

. >> that is just amazing. >> reporter: 39 people killed by these churning storms. going through indiana, kentucky, ohio, georgia and alabama. >> oh, no! get back! there it is. coming over the hill. >> reporter: countless others fleeing helter-skelter in cars, on foot. >> go on, go, get out, get out! >> reporter: this man scuttling into a basement in west liberty, kentucky, compelled to watch. >> oh, my god. no, no, we're all right. we're all right. >> reporter: in indiana, surviving and saving. when her house wasn't enough to protect them, stephanie decker shielded her children with her own body. >> i love my chirp. goes beyond anything else in this world. >> reporter: even giving up her legs for them. as the tornado bore down, she acted, dashing with 8-year-old dominic and 5-year-old reese into the basement. the house being sucked away around her. protecting them with her body. >> i put both of them in there and i tied the comforter and my daughter -- mom, i don't like this. i said, i no, honey. from the windows i could see the wind. i could see it blowing. then the window blew out. >> reporter:

comes the hard part. so many communities trying to move forward in marysville, indiana. a single church left standing among the rubble there. just nine miles away in henryville, people found one of the few churches left standing and gathered desperately needed supplies for those who lost everything holding on to each other in the pews. tonight we're also watching the weather map again because across a huge part of this tornado zone winter weather warnings are now up. snow and cold moving in, and we begin tonight with ginger zee in indiana who flew over the devastation today. ginger, good evening to you. >> reporter: good evening to you, david. this winter weather is just a second punch for so many affected by these tornadoes, and today we flew above the tornadic annihilation, and the images will take your breath away. oh, it's hard to see this from up here. seeing it from the air, mile after mile, ravaged by tornadoes, a new level of heartbreak. we just saw a home completely off its foundation. the storm blasted across the region southwest to northeast. new video shows the power amassin

million. and indiana, $1.7 billion. indiana, according to the u.s. department of labor, seems to have a real problem with doling out a lot of money in what they called improper payments. >> well, that's just poppycock. >> reporter: he says in indiana, much of the problem is people failing to register with the state jobs board before getting money. >> i don't think these can be characterized as improper payments. >> reporter: but the federal government stands pat. saying those safeguards prevent wrongful payments. >> we're holding them accountable to that. and we're saying you're not closing the gap when it comes to improper payments. >> reporter: the idea, making it that much harder for people like the chopper and others, to take your money right to the bank. >> so, mark, what's the labor department going to do about it? >> reporter: diane, one idea is to simply hand over the names of everybody who's actually received an improper payment to the irs and let the irs confiscate tax refunds. it's an idea that's gaining steam and already working in several states. and as a result of this s

her gnome in new piccan indiana. a hospital official says her entire family-- mother, father, brother, and sister-- were all killed in the storm. elsewhere in indiana, survivors are counting their blessings. elaine quijano is in the town of henryville tonight. >> reporter: wayne talbott used to have one of the best views in henryville but no longer. perched high on a hill, he sees only destruction. >> i worked all my life to have what we have, and it's all gone in 15 seconds, and... it's almost more than you can bear. >> reporter: just before the tornado reached his house, he managed to get his quadriplegic daughter to an interior room. then he heard the roar. >> i just got back in the front door, and went to shut the door and it hit and i couldn't close the door. i had to hold on to the door. >> reporter: he remembers saying a prayer. >> "dear lord, please take care of us." and he did. >> good girl, careful, find it. >> reporter: search teams scoured henryville, a town of 1900, for survivors. paige kolok and her partner patty hanifen, and search dog evie, began combing through the de

top story here for the last few nights and an incredible story of heroism and sacrifice out of indiana during that massive outbreak of tornadoes we covered here friday night. it's about a mother who used her own body as a human shield to protect her children as the house came crashing down on all of them. we get her story tonight from nbc's tom costello. >> reporter: huddled in the basement with a massive tornado bearing down on their new home, stephanie decker had just seconds to protect 8-year-old domenic and 5-year-old reese, so she wrapped them in a blanket and laid on top of them just as the house started coming apart. >> everything was just slamming into my back. i had my children in the blanket and they were screaming. mommy, i can't live without you, i don't want to die, please don't let me die. i said, you're not going to die, we're going to make it. >> reporter: when the storm cleared the home had been wiped from its foundation. stephanie and the kids were buried. >> i took my phone and made a video to my husband -- telling him i love him. >> reporter: it was domenic who clim

in the trayvon martin case. >>> and new video of the tornado that barreled through henryville, indiana, earlier this month. all that coming up this hour. >>> this morning we know the name of the u.s. soldier accused of killing 16 afghan civilians and where he's being held. the suspect is army staff sergeant robert bachlles. he's now in custody at ft. leavenworth in kansas by himself. he's married, a father of two kids. this was his first tour of duty in afghanistan but he's done three tours in iraq. here's what neighbors had to say about him. >> completely shocked. >> i would describe him as super fun to hang around with, kind of the life of the party. super loving, friendly to everybody he met, great with his kids. i just -- i don't -- i don't see how that has happened. i never saw any signs of marital problems. they always -- happy family, normal family. i mean we would go over there for birthday parties and they would come to my kids' birthday parties. they would -- always happy. happy day, you know. i don't know. >> we're learning more about bales through the people who know or knew him. cn

notice, but at the end of the last week, the ousted republican secretary of state in indiana was sentenced for voter fraud. he had been convicted of six felonies, including voter fraud, and he's the guy who runs elections in the state of indiana. mitch daniels, the republican governor in indiana, had refused to appoint anybody permanently to replace this guy once he was convicted of voter fraud. the governor saying that if the felony convictions could get knocked down to misdemeanors, maybe, then he would be happy to reinstate this guy to run indiana's elections. ultimately, late last week, the republican secretary of state did not get his felony convictions busted down to misdemeanors, so he can't get back into office. and now indiana might get a democrat installed in the secretary of state's seat instead. but mitch daniels saying he wanted to put a convicted voter fraud felon in charge of the state's elections, that probably does not help mitch daniels' vice presidential chances either. which brings, of course, to the other great milk toast hope for the vice presidential ru

that in fact an entire town we believe in indiana has, in fact, been decimated and as we have more word tonight we will continue to bring the very latest on the tornadoes and reports of damage and death as that toll continues to climb. and meanwhile tonight, we are only one day removed from the tragic death of our friend andrew breitbart. as his colleagues, friends and family all come together to remember his legacy, sadly there are those on the left who have refused to allow all of us the time to grieve and, instead, taken the internet and have attempted to smear the conservative new media pioneer. that includes left wing writer mike taibbi. with rolling stone magazine. hours after news of andrew's death he released a disgusting column that reads, quote: so andrew breitbart is dead. now here is what i have to say to that and i'm sure breitbart himself would have respected this reaction. good. blank him. i couldn't have been happier. is he dead. joining me now with reaction somebody who was very close to andrew columnist the one and only ann coulter. ann, i know you were very close to andrew.

are dead at this hour in indiana. more than two dozen tornadoes have been reported in six states. we've got tornado warnings right now in effect for 50 counties through this evening. all right. this is pretty frightening thing. some of these storms have been incredibly powerful. we've been talking about storms with winds up to 170, 180-mile-per-hour. they could be hitting heavily populated areas. we start with gary tuchman who is in nashville, tennessee, tonight. gary, what have you seen and heard? >> reporter: earin, this is one of those heavily populated areas. music city, tennessee. 1.7 million people are in the metropolitan area. one hour ago it was very scary for a lot of people who live here. that's when the winds came tearing through. hail the size of marbles started falling. we were standing outside our hotel up the street there. people were being yelled at to get out of the lobby because there was so much glass to go down in the basement. the glass did not break. the damage appears to be limited. right here now in nashville the worst appears to be over, however, about 30 miles sout

from themselves, if you will, indiana governor mitch daniels, there he is. you're watching "hardball," only on msnbc. when bp made a commitment to the gulf, we were determined to see it through. here's an update on the progress. we're paying for all spill related clean-up costs. bp findings supports independent scientists studying the gulf's environment. thousands of environmental samples have been tested and all beaches and waters are open. and the tourists are back. i was born here, i'm still here and so is bp. mid grade dark roast forest fresh full tank brain freeze cake donettes rolling hot dogs bag of ice anti-freeze wash and dry diesel self-serve fix a flat jumper cables 5% cashback right now, get 5% cashback at gas stations. it pays to discover. ♪ feel the power my young friend. mmm! [ male announcer ] for excellent fruit and veggie nutrition... v8 v-fusion, also refreshing plus tea. could've had a v8. >>> we've got new poll numbers now on the potential november election matchups. let's go to the "hardball" scoreboard. according to a new fox news poll, president obama's lead

a path of destruction in the state of indiana officials say at least 8 people are dead and we are just getting word from the kentucky governor that five people have died in that state as a result of this storm. and word is that the southern town of marysville, indiana has been completely decimated. now the sheriff from that town said, quote: it is completely gone. joining us now on the phone from henryville, indiana to tell us all about the extent of the damage sustained there and throughout the entire state our very own mike tobin. mike? >> hi, sean. it's remarkable with the intensity of funnel clouds the fact that you can approach one of these strike zones and not think that the damage is that bad. you see a lot of water and see a lot of emergency vehicles until you get right here to the bulls eye. a lot of damage. i'm looking at the damage to a building that had the roof torn off it appears to be a high school and one of the buildings adjacent. trees torn down. the file lage is largely gone because we are still winter. the trees are actually continue -- except for the trees that ar

henryville, indiana, stephanie decker heard it. >> i knew it was coming. i knew that just staying in your home, wasn't going to work. >> reporter: grabbing her 8-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter, she dove into the basement. combining grit with good sense, she grabbed a comforter, wrapping them up and covering them with her body. >> my daughter's like, i don't like this. i know, honey. i could see the wind. i could see it blowing. and the window blew out. and the house started to move. >> reporter: moments later, the 8,000-square-foot home imploded in a cascade of debris, crushing stephanie's legs. >> i knew if i didn't get help soon, i was not going to make it. i was going to bleed out. >> reporter: but her children, unscathed. and it was for them that stephanie forced herself to stay conscious. >> they needed me. they had to have me. so, i had to figure out what to do. and my son is a hero. he went to go get help. >> to look at it, you wouldn't think anybody could survive. >> reporter: today, in the rubble of her house, her in-laws told me how alone in the dark, stephanie took out he

, indiana. >> incredible story out of indiana tonight. >>> still ahead when we continue this evening, why are so many american preschoolers getting so many cavities? the trend making for a lot of difficult trips to the dentist. >>> and later, he's not even out of high school, but he's tackling the tough issues. he has to. he's the mayor after all. spent their whole careers here. [ charlie ] we're the heartbeat of this place, the people on the line. we take pride in what we do. when that refrigerator ships out the door, it's us that work out here. [ michael ] we're on the forefront of revitalizing manufacturing. we're proving that it can be done here, and it can be done well. [ ilona ] i came to ge after the plant i was working at closed after 33 years. ge's giving me the chance to start back over. [ cindy ] there's construction workers everywhere. so what does that mean? it means work. it means work for more people. [ brian ] there's a bright future here, and there's a chance to get on the ground floor of something big, something that will bring us back. not only this company, but this co

and a dozen victims in indiana. three people were killed in ohio and one death in both alabama and georgia. and, now, freezing temperatures and snow make the situation more difficult for many survivors, rick reichmuth is live in henryville, indiana, which was so hard hit. rick? >> rick: one of the towns, the list you gave of the different states gives you an idea of how widespread the event was, one of the towns, henryville, and, national weather service officers have done the preliminary investigation and this was an ef-4 tornado that struck the area. i want to give you an idea of the damage that happens in an ef-4 tornado, this is a diner and a school because from the junior high school across the street, that ended up being hit -- excuse me, that bus was thrown across the street into the diner, come out here to the front of out and see the front of the bus, the bus has been ripped off of the chassis, this is the body of the bus, the chassis on the other side, and it goes into the building. seems like this is common here, across the street, is the high school, they've had to fence it off

, tragedy in indiana. family of five wiped out by a tornado. hear from the man that tried to help them. >> i saw death. i knew we were done. >> you saw death? >> i mean, at that point, i knew it was over. >>> the white house says president obama has reiterated to israeli prime minister netanyahu that he supports diplomacy backed by pressure in the effort to keep iran from getting a nuclear weapon. they met for two hours at the white house today to talk about iran's nuclear program. the president says hen ate netanyahu prefer a peaceful solution. >>> police in texas searching for answering in the killing of an iranian student. houston police doubled the reward for information about the murder of the 30-year-old woman who was active in a local group that demonstrates for freedom and human rights for native country iran. police are going on record saying they're not ruling out the possibility that iran itself could be behind the murder of the young woman. cnn's drew griffin has the story. >> reporter: galardi in 2010 was on the streets protesting with the group saabs houston together trying to

. the republican governor of indiana mitch daniel declared 11 counties to be disaster area. the governor of kentucky well copped federal workers in the state. kasich said no thanks. as one ohio resident put it, a normal governor with a minimal sl shred of competence or compassion would coordinate with fema and other agencies on the recovery. but here in ohio, kasich responded to the disaster with the type of leadership we've come to expect from him. joining me now is ohio congressman "time" rtim ryan. what is going on here and you're somewhat and other federal representatives are somewhat at the mercy of kasich's decision, are you not? >> the governor needs to ask for help it's not just me it's conservative republicans like jean schmitt in southwest ohio one of the most conservative people in the house of representatives saying government get on the stick we have people that are hurting. so yeah, we need to be asked by the sitting governor. >> well, this just in, we just received word late today that governor kasich reconsidered his decision and has asked fema to respond, what do you mak

in a string of twisters across the south and the midwest. henryville, indiana, as we reported, got hit hard way massive twister. for the first time a look at funnel cloud as it took aim at one couple who did not get out of the way in time. susan candy kanl candiotti has . >> kept coming, getting bigger and bigger, way on the other side and you could see it coming down. >> this is crazy. >> reporter: from their living room window, lenora and her husband wayne saw a tornado coming at them in the distance. >> we both had our little cameras and doing it. >> that's as far -- ah -- >> man, that's a big one, too. it's a huge one. >> reporter: listen to it. >> he did not like storms. he watched them, and he liked seeing them, but i was a storm lover. >> reporter: but this twister was for real. >> it's coming right toward henryville. maybe we should tell them. it's coming here. it's picking up. it's picking stuff up pp. look, you can see it rotate. >> hope it goes to the north of us. it looks like it's heading right towards us. >> we could see it lifting stuff up. and coming out of the wall, and the

. frankly, rick santorum's campaign is lucky he is even on the ballot at all in the state of indiana. they had to contest the findings of the largest county in indiana because that county had initially said he had not turned in enough signatures to get on the ballot there. the rick santorum campaign is a mess. the rick santorum campaign is like a formula one race and everybody is in a formula one car, rick santorum is in a pinewood derby car. whatever you think about him as a candidate his campaign cannot seem to put its pants on one leg at a time. they can't do the basic stuff of running for president. the stuff that has nothing to do with whether or not you were popular, whether or not you have a lot of money, just means you're together enough to do the logistical paperwork, they have not been able to do that. frankly that makes it more amazing mitt romney is having a hard time beating this guy. but in the republican nominating process, rick santorum being a mess of a campaign has sort of been the least messy of all their messes. in a normal year with a normal political party runni

to the region tomorrow. the greatest risk is in ohio and indiana, and down in kentucky and tennessee. twisters ripped through missouri, tennessee, illinois, and kansas yesterday, killing 13 people and leaving the picturese that summed it all up for us today, picturees of relief that a grbs of spared in harrisburg, illinois. realization that most everything you've worked for is gone. and reflection on how much life can change in an instant. dean reynolds is in bridgeway, illinois, tonight. dean. >> reporter: scott, it's taken us a couple of days of driving around and surveying the damage to get a real sense of the power of this tornado and how it chewed up just about everything it touched. bit by bit, piece by piece, they tried to bring some order out of the chaotic landscape. donald davis sifted the debris in what was left of his harrisburg home. >so the roof just david in, huh? >> no, the house exploded. >> reporter: just exploded? >> part of the house here and parts of the house in my basement, parts of the house here and parts of my house right back over here two blocks. it exploded yes, si

into monday. in the meantime, images coming from the high school in indiana where you were at. the miracle in the high school. watch. these are the pictures as the twister hit. >> right. it takes 30 seconds. that's the gymnasium in henryville high school. it is a school where 400 students attend, k through 12. the twister is hitting when the light comes up. the roof is gone, the walls are gone. if those students would have been there. they were dismissed about a half hour before that happened, it would have been deadly. >> minutes making the difference. ginger zee, thanks so much. >>> now to the race for president. it's "your voice, your vote" and rick santorum is campaigning in illinois. mitt romney heading there two. both battling it out before tuesday. but before then, puerto rico votes, with 23 delegates. in the primary right there tomorrow. i'm going to bring in david kerley who is at the white house tonight, we know that rick santorum, in puerto rico, where they speak spanish, said they to learn english, long before becoming a state. i want to get your reaction. >> they'd have to spe

to the elite eight, last night top ranked kentucky beat indiana 102-90 in the semifinal. winning was north carolina who needed overtime to beat the ohio bobcats. the question is how am i doing on the cnn anchor leaderboard? not bad, i'm in a tie for third as we head closer to the final four, go syracuse. let me know how your bracket is doing, tweet me at randi k@cnn. >> in exchange for services, clyde anderson shows us how, next. today, we stand against the tyranny of meager travel cards. battle speech right? may i? capital one is issuing a venture double miles challenge. show us how much you spent last year and we'll give you 2 miles for every dollar spent on your travel reward card. up to 100,000 miles! hawaii, here we come. claim your miles at capitalone.com today! what's in your wallet? can you play games on that? not on the runway. no. can you play games on that? ♪ when your chain of supply goes from here to shanghai, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ chips from here, boards from there track it all through the air, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ clearing customs like that hurry up no time flat t

learned that indiana's aid application, which claimed more than 25 million dollars in damages from storms in the last couple of weeks, had been approved by fema, senator dick durbin and others were outraged. >> to think that these local communities or our state with its own budget problems can take care of this is just naive. >> reporter: fema said denied applications are not unprecedented. last year's minnesota's request after storms and tornadoes was also rejected. >> turning down a disaster is never easy. we know there's real people and real homes that have been impacted. this is not about the individual or the family. this is really about looking at the impacts to the state. >> reporter: illinois is appealing the decision, scott. its congressional delegation and governor quinn will be meeting with fema officials in washington tomorrow. >> pelley: dean, thanks very much. he's a mobster turned author. now the words he wrote may seal his fate. that's next. that's next. can you start the day the way you wa can orencia help? [ woman ] i wanted to get up when i was ready, not my joints. [ f

indiana, some remarkable images have emerged. surveillance cameras inside henryville junior/senior high school captured the tornado there. and the most dramatic scene was in the skrgym. the force of the tornado and the vacuum, it sucked the debris out of the building, leaving a skeleton of what it was once was. >>> we turn to politics and the republican battle for delegates as they look forward to primaries in puerto rico tomorrow and illinois on tuesday. as they campaign today rick santorum and mitt romney showed their dramatically different styles. ron mott has the latest for us tonight. >> reporter: if they were movies rick santorum's campaign might be the low key independent breakout. while mitt romney's cast a look of a big-studio blockbuster. fireworks and all. differences in tone and budget that santorum noted at an event today in missouri with signs of romney everywhere. >> and money isn't going to buy this election. vision and character and authenticity and trust are going to win this election >> reporter: from the now famous sweater vest, santorum continues to captivate blue c

was in the united states of america, they pay taxes to the federal government, in times like thes indiana, kentucky will get help, ohio teachers, police, fire getting laid off and yet an opportunity to get some federal help and he doesn't take it. but this is consistent with his behavior. >> it's very strange behavior, one of two things here, number one he didn't know how bad it was, or number two he's putting his political ideology ahead of people who pay taxes. >> i have never heard of a governor where there is death and destruction in the millions say we're not going to take the help. it's out rain us. >> mind-boggling as one constituent said mind boggling. you think of anybody whether in a leadership position or not your first instinct how do we help to the people and come out and with the level of bravado, we're looking in 2012, ed, for mature leadership, not seeing it in the republican primaries, not seeing it with the governor in ohio. you're in an emergency situation, take an assessment of the landscape, look around, see what is going on and then make a decision but to go down after this ha

a conversation down the road. it's hard to stop romney unless santorum or somebody has to take away indiana, has to take away west virginia, has to take away north carolina. even here romney clinches a map that's overwhelmingingly tinted in his favor. as we have the conversation tonight, it's up for anybody but romney. >> i mean, will this be a different conversation if rick santorum wins and wins big in louisiana this weekend? >> i don't think so. this is a war of attrition. and while he may be able to pick up some of the louisiana delegates like illinois, again, many of our delegates will be selected by a congressional district. and you have to look and see if rick santorum is on the ballot or he's found enough delegates. i don't believe they have any incentive to leave the race. it's really up to mitt romney. i was reading just a while ago because i teach on wednesday. if i had to grade mitt romney, he'd get an a in math. . but in terms of chemistry, i think he gets a c +. >> what do you meek of donna's argue? >> you can see by the exit polling, there's a core group of conservatives. if you l

. >>> a revealing look this morning into the ef-4 tornado that wiped out entire communities in indiana. surveillance cameras inside henryville high school rolling on march 2nd as the tornado headed straight for the school. students were heading on their school buses after this happened. immediately after the teachers got the students back inside the school, this hit. incredible video. about 80 staff school teachers and students were inside the school. nobody was injured. isn't that incredible? you look at that video and it's hard to believe no one was hurt. >> it is unreal. the damage bolgs the imagination. >> the power of it. >> the biggest danger that you have when you have storms like this is not really the wind but rather the stuff that gets picked up by the wind. a small coin, a penny, and can be picked up and with winds that can top 300 miles an hour, it can become a deadly projectile, almost like a bullet. that's the reason why during tornadoes the safest place to be is under ground if possible. there's a chance we'll see an outbreak later today. we might see it later this afternoon in portio

personnel have been missing in iraq. >>> some indiana students are finding out just how lucky they are today. this is an ef-4 tornado slamming into their school. watch how the tornado pulverizes the gym and destroyed the front hallway. about 80 students and staff were there when it hit. >>> syrian activists found victims of a recent attack by thugs in the city of homs. 32 children and two women were found tortured and brutalized. half of the children have been returned to relatives since most of their parents were killed in the massacre. >>> of course that is far from the only tragedy reported in homs. over the past month we have seen several videos that appear to show killings and atrocities committed by security forces in opposition neighborhoods. new footage is among the most disturbing yet. we should warn you you are about to see scenes that are very hard to watch. >> [ speaking foreign language ]. >> reporter: the men crouch as they move across rooftops. crawling through holes they smashed through the walls. it's taken them nearly a week to get this far, to reach a house on a sectarian

this area, illinois, indiana, kentucky, who have come and tried to help out and cleaning up as we speak. we hear the machines in the background. >> i talked to the mayor last night and i remember him saying people from that town had gone and volunteered in joplin, missouri, last year, and so it is nice to see folk from all overcoming to help. gary, appreciate the day and i am sure it has been difficult. still ahead, a showdown in the senate over contraception and the sudden passing of andrew breitbart, dead at the age of 43. hey, it's sandra -- from accounting. peter. i can see that you're busy... but you were gonna help us crunch the numbers for accounts receivable today. i mean i know that this is important. well, both are important. let's be clear. they are but this is important too. [ man ] the receivables. [ male announcer ] michelin knows it's better for xerox to help manage their finance processing. so they can focus on keeping the world moving. with xerox, you're ready for real business. how they'll live tomorrow. for more than 116 years, ameriprise financial has worked for their cl

places like indiana, north carolina, virginia, you know, some of these states that are not as reliably red like louisiana is. you know, it could have some effect and turn out some enthusiasm and a lot of other things out there. they're decidedly unenthusiastic about it. >> sure. amy, let's turn to the trayvon martin case. you've heard president obama has been criticized by some in the african american community for not speaking out earlier. yesterday he made the story very personal. listen to what he said. >> you know, if i had a son, he'd look like trayvon, and, you know, thing they are right to expect that all of us as americans are going to take this with the seriousness it deserves and get to the bottom of what exactly happens. >> amy, what do you think about that? did he say the right thing? >> i think it was right for president obama to speak out in sympathy of trayvon's family and of so many americans that have rallied in support of trayvon. i can understand why he took his time. if you remember when president obama leapt into the controversial involving the professor from harva

from all over this area, illinois, indiana, kentucky, who have come and tried to help out and cleaning up as we speak. we hear the machines in the background. >> i talked to the mayor last night and i remember him saying people from that town had gone and volunteered in joplin, missouri, last year, and so it is nice to see folk from all over coming to help. gary, appreciate the day and i am sure it has been difficult. still ahead, a showdown in the senate over contraception and the sudden passing of andrew breitbart, dead at the age of 43. what ? customers didn't like it. so why do banks do it ? hello ? hello ?! if your bank doesn't let you talk to a real person 24/7, you need an ally. hello ? ally bank. no nonsense. just people sense. imagine if you could always see life [music] in the best light. every time of day. outdoors, or in. transitions® lenses automatically filter just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it is meant to be seen. maybe even a little better. experience life well lit, ask for transitions adaptive lenses. why you fell in love with her in the

to see him take new jersey. i'm giving him north carolina here. west virginia. indiana. romney campaign people are watching at home saying no way. this is a hypothetical to be generous to santorum. here's a huge one in the west. california. most romney people say we don't have the people to take it. give a few states back to romney. romney clinches in this scenario. that would be enough. and there's still other states the romney campaign thinks it might beat santorum in his home state of pennsylvania. that's an april contest. we'll have that conversation in a few weeks. under this generous scenario, governor romney still clinches. he's still in second place. if i could give him california, look at that. if i gave senator santorum under this scenario. right at the finish line. just a little bit over. so even if senator santorum stuns us in illinois tomorrow, he would have to run the map. currently he's winning 20% of the delegates. he has won 20%. he needs to win 70% to clinch the nomination. he would have to win 60-plus to deny governor romney and go to the convention with an argument.

home collapsed in southern ell. georgia, alabama, kentucky, indiana and missouri also hit hard. high winds, hail and rain damaging homes uprooting trees and flooding streets across the region. a tornado watch remains in effect for parts of kentucky and indigo until 1:00 a.m. local time. >>> president barack obama saying he would support further investigation into the shooting death of unarmed florida teen trayvon martin. the neighborhood watchman who shot the 17-year-old has hot been charged sparking charges of racism from some critics. members of the miami heat showing solidarity by wearing hoodies like the one martin was wearing when died. i'm claudia cowen. now, back to greta and "on the record." >> greta: now, our candid conversation with rush limbaugh continues. >> what would you do about let's take detroit with an unemployment number in the inner city of upwards of 25% and it is absolutely disgraceful that is a community is suffering so. what would you do? >> get rid of every liberal in government. what is the one constant? run by liberals. detroit, other places, microcosm of w

working class sacrifice, anxieties, fears, in ohio, in pennsylvania, in indiana, in illinois. it's, if you put joe biden up against rick santorum, i think i know who i like in the fight. >> he's the star of the day today. i want to get one more bite of biden outlining what is basically his closing argument. this is the choice you face with these candidacies. let's listen to this. >> it's a choice, a clear choice. a choice between a system that's rigged and a system that's fair. a system that says everyone will be held accountable for their actions, not just the middle class. a system that trusts the workers on the line instead of listening to the folks up in the suites. folks, that's the choice. it's a stark choice. and in my mind, it's not even a close call. >> who better to send out there to give that speech? >> i mean, you know, when we're running against mitt romney, the guy from the suite, i mean -- >> the guy who owns the suite. >> who owns the suite. my question is, why does biden keep referencing gingrich who clearly has no chance to win and is just sort of a dead man walking and i

of the jurors and a personal story out of indiana of a couple who watched the storm in henryville. they were capturing it on video when they realized their own lives were in grave danger. sadly, one did not make it. also, a story that's caused both outrange and pain. a young soldier's photo used ads on a dating website. the problem is, he was killed in iraq more than four years ago. the family says the sites took the photo without permission. >> now, outrage, fear and calls for a high level investigation into the sanford, florida police department. the man who admitted to shooting an unarmed 17-year-old boy who died nearly three weeks ago continues to walk the streets. today, the mayor said 911 recordings from the night trayvon martin was killed will be made public. in fact, we can tell you right now, we know that trayvon's family is listen to those calls at this moment. 28-year-old george zimmerman was on gated watch duty when he crossed paths with martin, who was there visiting family. zimmerman said he called 911 to report a suspicious person. they told him not to approach martin and mart

the obama administration from preventing this law. >> the united states court has upheld this law in indiana and the justice department under other administrations has upheld it for other states under the voting rights act. >> so i believe there is a precedent that this will be a losing battle for the federal government. >> it's controversial and they may go after other states, coming up next. what do you think will happen? >> i believe at then of the day, the law will prevail. this does not suppress minority vote. they make claims all the time that didt does. but they show no data. there is no proof that what they say is true. they are just saying it. i believe the law will prevail in the end. >> alan wilson, the attorney general of south carolina. thank you for joining us on the fox newschannel. i hope that the u.n. doesn't knock on your door. >> i am want worried about the u.n. >> by the way, if you suspect voter fraud, go to voter fraud@foxnews.com. we want to know about it. >> great job. >> u.s. troops have made great gains in the war in afghanistan. but several recent incidents could u

, indiana earlier this month. >> mike: a shocking confession from one of the leading cardiologists after performing over 5,000 open heart surgeries, he says doctors have it all wrong. the causes, the treatment, everything. yeah, that cardiologist is with us on the studio. fourth hour of st. patrick's day "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ ♪ >> wow! >> beautiful. look at these live pictures from dublin, ireland. they come to us, courtesy of travel zoo. and here is the parade in full force. >> it is one o'clock in the afternoon there. and a typical cloudy day there in dublin, but a great celebration. happy st. patrick's day to all of you, as you know, we tend to kick it up a notch in terms of our st. patrick's day celebration. >> they come here and they're surprised how big it is, but do us a favor, send us your photos today to @ff weekend on twitter we want to see your celebrations today to see a special st. patrick's day and we'll run some tomorrow. >> and here in the united states, and people from ireland can't figure out. even if you're not irish, you wear green and celebrate. th

-65 was the final, 24 turnovers for the tar heels. and number one, with revenge on their minds, and indiana upset the cats early this year, and last night, kentucky got 16 straight free throw to seal this in the final five minutes 102-90 and they get, the cats get baylor. happy birthday to peyton manning. he is 36. this morning. 36. and $9 million on the way. rick how is the weather? rick: just like you guys. so it has cooled down considerably and still it is nice across the northeast. look at this map, chicago, so we were talking about how warm it has been and how long, nine days in a row this week over the last two weeks as chicago broke records and eight days they were above 80 degrees in march. insane. now, year, 63 degrees and we are back into more reasonable temperatures but, still, above average, and we still have temperatures 20 degrees above average for a last people in the plains. and now across the northeast today, we will see a few shower from time to time, moving into northeast late tonight, but, temperatures still in the 60's for everyone, and it is before our average although it is

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